At f HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editoe ajtd Publisher. RLK COUNTY TUK REPUBLICAN PARTY. Two Dollars ter Akntjm. VOL. II. RIDGWAY, PA,. THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 1872. NO. 6. POETR r. tTH eibre wina OP SOMA. The fagot, blaud, th. caldron's smoke Up through tli. green wood curled ; " Bring honey from the hollow oak, Bring milky rap," the. brewer, .poke, la the childhood of the world. ApA brewed they well or brcwod tbey 111, The priests thrust in their rod, . First touted and then drank their fill. And shouted, with one Tolce and will, " Behold the drink of goda I" They drank, and lo t In heart and brain A new, glad life bgan ; The gray of hair grow young again, . The lick man laughed away hit pain. The cripple leaped and ran. " Drink, mortals, what the gods have sent, Forget your long annoy." So sung the priests. From tent to tent The Soma's sacred madness went, A storm of drunken oy. Then knew each rapt Inebriate A winged and glorious birth. Soared upward, with strange Joy elate. Boat, with dated head, Tarana's gate. And sobered, sunk to earth. The land with Soma's praises rang ; On Gihon's banks of shade Its hymns th. dusky maidens sang : In Joy of life or mortal pang All men to Soma prayed. The morning twilight of the race Sends down these irutin psalms ; And still with woniertng eyes we trace The simple praters to Soma's grace. That Ver'Jj verse embalms. As In 0-t child-world's early year, v after age has striven tiy music, incens., vigils drear. And trance, to bring the skies moro near, Or lift men up to heaven! Some fever of the blood and brain. Some self-oxaltlng spell, The sconrgcr's keen delight of pain. The Dervish dance, the Orphic strain. The wild-haired Bacchant's yclL The desert's hair-grown hermit sunk The saner brute below; , The naked Santon, hashish-drunk, The eloister madness of the monk, The fakir's torturo show I And yet the past comes round again, And new doth old fullBl ; In sensual transports wild as vain We brow in many ft Christian fan. The hoathen Soma still I Dear Lord and Father of mankind. Forgive our foolish ways I . Reclothe us in our rightful mind. In purer lives thy sorvice find. In deeper reverence, praise. In simple trust like theirs who heard Beside the Syrian sea The gracious calling of the Lord, Let us, like them, without a word. Rlso up and follow thee. 0 Sabbath rest by Galilee t O calm of hills above. Where Jesus knelt to share with the. Tho silonce of eternity Interpreted bv love 1 With that deep hush subduing all Our words and works that drown The tender whisper of thy call. As noiseless let thy blessing fall As fell thy manna down. Drop thy still dews of quietness, Till all our strivings cease ; Take from our souls the strain and strew. And let our ordered lives confess The beauty of thy peace. Breathe through the heat, of our desire Thy coolness and thv balm ; Let sense be dumb, let flesh retire ; Speak through the earthquake, wind, and fire, O still, small voice of calm I John a. Whittter. in Atlantic Monthly. Till! STORY-TELLER. ARNOLD'S WIFE. It had caused a commotion in aristo cratic circles when it was known that Arnold Morford had married a nobody, " My dear," said Mrs. Drumo to her mend and conhdant, tno stylish mrs. Cleveland, " she is really nobody. He picked her up in some out-of-the-way place where he was spending the sum mer, fishing. iiis sisters are penecuy wretched about it." " I should think they might be," was the sympathizing reply. "A young, handsome man, with his wealth, posi tion, and connections why, he might have married in our very first cir cles;" and Mrs. Cleveland thought of her daughter Arabella s thin Bhoulders and twenty-six summers, and noted the news upsn her mental tablets as " one more chance gone." It was not likely that so important a person as the only son of Morford, of Mortord & (iiles, junior partner ot that important firm, nephew ot lilies, a bach elor, who would probably leave him all his money, could marry without creating somo stir in his own social circle ; but when, as Mrs. Cleveland expressed it, he " sneaked off to somo obscure town to marry a raw country girl he was proba bly ashamed of," society was really in a flutter. It was understood by sympathizing friends, that Lucy Clifford and Leonora Maxwell, the sisters of the bridegroom, were completely prostrated by their brother's infatuation and obstinacy, al though the old gentleman declared he " did not see why the boy should not marry as he pleased. There 'was money enough to start him in life, if his wife had not two dresses to wear." In the meantime the young bride groom, happy and hopeful, was yet not entirely oblivious of the probable com motion amongst his friends, and keenly alive to the anger of his fashionablo sis ters, lie had won his little bride his wood-violet, as he called her when boarding with her widowed mother dur ing a summer vacation, lie loved her fondly, and he trusted in her love, as she had yet to learn that he was wealthy. Yet, deeply in love as he was, Arnold Morford was slightly troubled. He had taken bis bride to New York, established her in a fashionable hotel, and after a week of quiet happiness, ventured upon the delicate ground that caused his per plexity. Seating himself upon the sofa, he drew his wife down beside him, and thus commenced : " I want to say something to you, Et tie, darling, that may hurt your feelings a little. Will you believe that I have a motive for doing so, and forgive me be fore I speak '" " You know X will," she said, softly, lifting her sky blue eyes lovingly to his face. She was very pretty ; a little fairy like blonde, with a complexion like a miniature painting, a wealth of golden curls, fect and hands like Titania g, and a mouth like a cloft rosebud. ." It is bout our future, love. You murriud me believing we should live in a tiny house, whore you would have to prepare the meals, keep tho rooms in or der, and look upon a silk dress as a lux ury to be indulged in once in a lifetime. Did you not ?" She only looked at him with wonder ing eyes. ' Well, Ettio, love in a cottage is not to bo our lot, sweet though it is. My father is a man who counts his money in hundreds of thousands, my sisters are tho wives of men of large wealth, and I am an only son, and junior partner in the firm of which my father and my mother's brother are the heads. I do not want my little wife to bo worried yet with the cares of housekeeping, so I have taken a suite of rooms in a large board-ing-houso, whore she will have nothing to do but enjoy herself. My father lives with my oldest sister, bo there is no real home for my fair bride. But now I am coming to tho point that may wound you your dress. " I thought you liked all my dresses,' said the littlo bride, thinking of the many hours sho had spent with her mother, stitching on her modest trous seau. " I do. If only my taste were consult ed, I would never want to see my little lily-of-tho-valley in any dress but tho pretty muslins in which 1 nrst saw her. But darling, my wife will have a social position to maintain, must move in BO' ciety, receive and pay calls, eo to con certs, parties, and operas, and must dress in a style befitting her beauty and my wealth. .Now, .bttie, don t look so ter rified. You shall not go home for two months, and before that time tho dry- goods merchants, dressmakers and milli ners shall transform you into a fashion ably dressed littlo lady." "But, Arnold, do you mean that I must wear such dresses as the ladies we seo at the table ?" "Exactly." " And hats and cloaks such as we see on Broadway ?" "Yes." " And the the money ?" " Don't fret about that." " I think I understand you, Arnold. You Will go with me, just at first, will you not ?" She was a sensible littlo woman, and she let no foolish pique influence her while yet her gentle modesty was un-, touched by the idea of finery and fash ion. Society had calmed down somewhat after the flutter occasioned by Arnold Morford's marriage, when again it was agitated by tho invitations issued by Mrs. Lucy Clifford for an evening party to introduce Mrs. Arnold Morford to her circle of friends. Ladies who had secretly hoped to bo the bride introduced, shrugged their shoulders, and wondered if the " gawky country girl knew how to behave her self," but prepared for the occasion, while the sisters-in-law, in private council, agreed that " they were agreeably sur prised at Arnold's choice." " Really, my dear," said Mrs. Clifford, " her trousseau is in exquisite taste." " And Arnold has given her perfect jowelry." " She is so shy and graceful, and so very pretty, that society will readily overlook any little gaucherie." "But sho really has none. She is a lady, if she was country born and bred. Did you hear her play '" " Don't toll anybody ; sho was edncat ed at a musical school for a music-teacher, but nobody need know that." " She never taught ?" " No ; Arnold found her when she was only at home a few weeks from school. Between you and me, Arnold has mode a better choice than any of tho silly girls would havo been who have been trying to catch him for the past ten years." " I was afraid he would be an old bachelor, like Uncle Giles. By-the-woy, Ettie must be years younger than ho is." " She is seventeen." " And he thirty-one. Well, tho dif ference is on the right side." " Did you venture upon any hint about her dress on Wednesday even ing?" "Not I. Trust Arnold for that. With her taste, and his tavoir t'aire. vou mav be sure she will be appropriately dressed. I might have hinted ut her wedding dress, but I am terribly afraid it was a shilling calico." Mentally the ladies concluded that they were right to trust to Arnold and lit tie, when the bride entered Mrs. Clif ford's crowded drawing-room. Tho fiure blonde beauty of the winning little ady bore well the dress of exquisite lace over rose-tinted white silk, while tho golden hair, in soft, full curls, was caught here and there by pearl Bprays. Pearl jewels adorned tho round white arms and throat, and caught up the costly lace bertha on the shoulders. From the tip of the white satin slipper to the snowy gloves, there was no fault to find, and the favorable impression awakened by the fair, shy face and beau tiful dress was increased by the grace ful manner, the evident cultivation of mind, and the artistic musical culture of the little bride. It was not long beforo tho shy little country beauty found herself f-iirly launched in the cream of fashionablo so ciety, and Arnold could, with a sigh of content, fool that she had under her shy manner the tact ot a lady, and the earnest desire to do honor to herposition as a wifo. Ten years passed over Ettio Morford s head before any event of more than us ual interest occurred to break upon that rare combination, a perfectly happy married life. Two - children graced her homo, for Arnold had, long ago, yioldod to her de sire to keep house, though he insisted upon a housekeeper; and her sunny life had left but a few linos of age or care upon her lovely face. The girlish contour was gone, the shy drooping of tho eyelids was long conquered ; but tho ennobling expression of maternity had replaced these, and the dignity of the young matron well bocame tho young figure. 'It had long been conceded that if Mrs. Morford was not especially well versed in small-talk, scandal and flirt ing, that sho was mere than usually well read, and could converso easily and gracefully with men whose society was esteemed an honor from their intellec tual acquirements or scientific standing. She was no pedant, and niado no pre tensions to literary attainments beyond the usual acquirements of her sex ; but she read and studied intelligently, and where sho found the conversation soar ing beyond her comprehension, could listen modestly, and gain informotion. She was entirely happy. How many can say bo truly ? But a blow was to come to her that was sudden and unexpected. It was at a largo evening pary that sho heard the first intimation ot approaching dan ger. Sho was seated in a deep window-seat, hidden by tho heavy curtains, when two gentlemen, standing near her, com menced a conversation that made her heart seem to stand still. " They say," said one, " that Morford & Giles will have to suspend payment." " I have heard such a rumor. They snfforod severely bv the failure of Willets & Co." " And 1 suspect they suffer some from the extravagance of Arnold's wife. That woman's dress must cost a small fortune, and the children are always a mass of embroidery and finery." " Her jowelry would support a fam ily." The voices died away, but Ettie had heard enough. Was this really true ? Her conscienco was clear, for sho knew that Arnold alone was to blame for her own and her children's expensive ward robes. Her jowelry was always a Christ mas or birthday gift from her husband, and ho knew, if no others did, that it was to pleaso him she wore expensive toilets, when sho would have willingly returned to the simple muslins and cali coes of her girlhood. There was a glad smile on her lips as she parted tho curtains, and stepped in to) the room. An hour later, she was in her own room with her husband, and throw ing asido her wrappigs, she modo him sit besido hr, by a pleading " I am not tired, an 1 I want to talk to you." Not looking in his face, she repeated the conversation Bho hod heard, and asked: " Is it true, Arnold ?" "That your extravagance has embar rassed us r No. Wo are in difficulties, great difficulties, but wo hope to weath er the storm. Willets & Company's failure was a great blow to us, and wo unfortunately made somo losing invest ments in the fall. If I could now have ten thousand dollars to meet present emergencies, we could see our way clear. I hope to borrow that." " But if you borrow it, vou must pay it back." " Certainly. But we gain time." " Still, if you could have it without borrowing ?" " That would, indeed, relieve in. But that is impossible." " Arnold, wilt you listen to u story, and not ask any questions till it is fin ished ?" " Is it not too late for stories to night ?" " Please, let me tell you." "Well!" " Once upon a time, there was a littlo country girl who married a rich city merchant. She had been a poor girl all her life, and industry had becomo a necessity to her. After her marriage she found herself condemned to a life of almost entire idleness. Her husband was fond of her and proud of her, and one of his prides was to see her always beautifully dressed. In order to ensure this, he gave her a liberal allowance for material and dressmaker's bills. Now, this wicked little woman having a knack for sewing, took it into her head that dressmakers and milliners wore not necessary to aid her in making a fash ionable appearance, and secretly, while her husband was away during the day, she learned to make her own dresses and hats. Ckildren came to bless her, and the gonorous allowance for dress was in creased, while still timo was found for embroidories and dainty stitching for the little ones. In all this time the lit tle woman kept a memorandum of the cost saved upon each dress, and by way of preparing an umbrella for a rainy day, commenced a little, hoard of money, that grew year by year, till Arnold, do you not guess how my story is to end ? I have more than enough saved to help you now.. You havo been so generous, that I have saved over a thou sand dollars every year, and now yau will not have to borrow money to meet your embarrassments, for it is here, in the house, all your own." And nobody knew or guessed that Morford & Giles owned their continued prosperity and credit to the economy and industry of Arnold's wife. What Makes Men. It is not the best things that is, the things which we call best that make men ; it is not the pleasant things ; it is not the calm experiences of life ; it is life's rugged experiences, its tempest, its trials. The discipline of life is hcra good and there evil, here trouble and. . i i . there joy, nore ruaeness ana mere smoothness, one working with the other ; and the alternations of the one and the other which necessitate adapta tions constitute that part of education which makes a man a man, in distinc tion from an animal, which has no edu cation. The successful man invariably bears the mark of the struggles which he has had to undergo on his brow. Jixchange. There is, perhaps, no time at which we are disposed to think so highly of a friend as when we see him standing higher than we expected in the esteem of others. Monolith Temples. Tho largest existing monolith temple in Egypt. ., a tetnplo hewed out of a single block of granite is that of Tol-cl-mai, on the Delta. It is 21 feet 9 inches high, 111 fect broad, and 11 foot ? inches deep. Large as this structure is, it was exceeded by that of Amasis, which was also on the Delta, and which Herodotus states required threo years to transport, with tho aid of 2,000 labor ers, from Elephantine to Sais, a distance ordinarily of twenty days' Nilotic navi gation. According to tho same venera ble authority, a third and still larger monolith templo was tho glory of Lato na, a city which stood on tho western branch of tho Nile, and distant about twenty miles from its mouth. " The most wonderful thing" (relates the father of profane history) " that was actually to bo seen about this temple was a chap el in tho inclosure made of a single stone, the length and height of which was tho same, each wall being forty cu bits square (sixty feet), and tho whole a single block I Another block of stone formed tho roof, and projected at the eaves to tho extent of four cubits." Ac cording to these admeasurements, Sup posing the walls to havo been only six feet thick, and the material granite, as in all other monoliths, this monument would weigh 7,000 tons, being 70,032 cubic feet, without the cornice, which was placed on the roof. This cap-stone, although comparatively of inconsidera-' bio weight 2,400 tons, if six feet be taken for its thickness displays a won derful example of the union of skill and power in its elevation through tho air to the altitude of more than sixty feet. If any doubt exists respecting tho ability of tho ancients to transport and uplift such enormous masses of stono as these, it is set at rest by M. Jomard, tho celebrated Egyptologist, who gives a sketch, in his work on Egypt, published by the French govern ment, of a huge block of granite sit uated almost a quarter of a mile from tho modern town of Syene, where it was abandoned for some unknown reason while on its way from tho quarry. It bears numerous traces of instruments in the work on its surfaco, as well as evi dences of its having been intended for a colossal statue. M. Jomard's dimen sions are tho largest 22 2-10 meters, and for tho body and back 6 1-2 meters, or about 72, 21, and 21 English feet, which, at 13 cubic feot per ton, yield nearly 2500 tons ! This block of gran ite is probably the largest in existence of which there is indisputable evidence of its having been moved by sheer man ual force. Tho Birds in Winter. What do tho birds do in winter? Many, you know, go South. As a gen eral thing, winter's cold does not seem to affect those who stay with us. Tho truth is, birds are remarkably well guarded against cold by their thick covering of down and feathers, and the quick circu lation of their blood. Tho chickadee is never so lively as in clear, cold woather. When tho thermo meter is throe of four degrees below zero, it shows by its behavior that it is pretty cold. On such a morning I have seen a small flock of them on tho sunny sido of a thick homlock, rather quiet, with ruf fled feathers, like balls of gray fur, wait ing with an occasional chirp, for the sun's rays to begin to warm them up ; a littlo sober, perhaps, but ready, if cold continued, to got used to it. What do they eat J' Our merciful Father does not loavo tho earth bare. There is food enough and to spare. The seeds of tho grasses and taller summer flowers, and tho elders, birches and ma ples furnish supplies that the cold and snow does not destroy ; also the buds of various trees and shrubs, for the buds do not first como jn the spring, as some peo ple think ; tliero are buds all winter ; there are insects, too. A sunny nook any timo during the winter will show you a variety of two winged flies, and several kinds of rpi ders, often in great numbers, and as' brisk as ever. Then in the crevices of tho treo bark and dead wood there must bo something nice to be had, judging from the activity of tho chickadees, gold crests, and their associates. In the winter no mischief can be done ; there is no fruit to steal. Nothing can be destroyed now except the farmer's enemies ; yet tho birds keep at work all the time. Winter, ton, is favorable to sociability among birds as among people. The chickadee, the gold-crested wren, the white-breasted nut-hatch, and the dow ny wood-pecker form a littlo winter clique. You do not often see one of the members without one or more of the others. No sound in nature is more cheery than the calls of a little troop of this kind, echoing through the woods on a still, sunny day in winter the lively chatter of the chickadee, the slender contented pipe of the golden-crests, and the emphatic, business-like hank of the nut-hatch, as they drift leisuroly along from tree to tree. A Nice Point. During tho war, a man named Smith had a mule taken from him by the Uni ted States military authorities for use in the army. Smith subsequently died, and his widow made application for pay ment. Pending tho application or the widow, tho guardiun of Smith's infant children intervened, claiming that pay ment should not be made to the widow, but should be paid to him as guardian. The guardian's allegation is that after Smith's wife died (who was the mother of these infant children), Smith married again ; after which Smith died, leaving this widow, (the applicant above do scribed). But it is alleged that when Smith married this second wife she had another husband living, and therefore her marriage to Smith was void. Tho guardian consequently claims the money oa behalf of tho minor children of Smith. The application, says the Wash ington Chronicle, is in the Third Audi tor's office, and the clerks there are puz zling themselves over the conundrum. Grand Jnry Stories. Col. T. W. Knox, in Scribner1! for March, has an article on the famous Now York Grand Jury of which he was a member. Wo quote from it as fol lows : Not many days after wo wore con vened, a case that touched the heart of every man in tho room was brought be foro us. A young girl had boen accused of theft; a few dollars in money had been stolon ; it was found in her pos session. Tho complainant was a wo man, and the accused had been in her employ. When tho case was called the woman entered tho jury-room and was sworn by the foreman. Sho took tho chair assigned to witnesses, and the fore man questioned her. " Did you lose some money?" " Yes, sir." " When did you lose it t " " On the first day of December." "Who took it?" " Tho girl named in tho complaint." " How do you know sho took it ?" " I found it in her possession, and she confessed taking it." " That will do ; you may go." But tho woman kept her seat, and moved her hands uneasily. " You can go," Baid tho foreman again, but she did not start. A juror sitting near the door rose to show her out, and as he did so the woman said : " I do not wish to press the complaint. I want to withdraw it and have the girl released." " Why so ?" asked the foreman. "Because," and her voico began to choke, " becauso the girl is young, and I do not wish to ruin her. Somebody elso urged her to stoal the money, and I think she will do better in future. If I send her to prison she may becomo a professional thief, but if I give her a chance sho will be a good girl. She is an orphan and lias no friends, and I want to bo her friend. I know she is guilty, but I want to bo merciful, and I beg you to bo merciful, gentlemen." Half her uttoranco was drowned with tears, which flowed rapidly down her face. The foreman told her to step out side and he would cull her again in a few moments, and inform her of the ro sult of her eloquent appeal. " Bo mer ciful, gentlemen," were her last words as she closed the door. It was voted to dismiss the complaint, and whon the foreman called her to the room, to inform her of the result of the vote, and commended her for her kind ness of heart, her tears flowed afresh, and she thanked us through broken sobs. I know that in that room more eyes than hers were wet eyes not accustomed to tears. But soon a discussion aroso as to tho propriety of our action. When the Grand Jury was impanelled the following oath was administered to the foreman: "You Lucius S. Comstock, as Foreman of this Grand Inquest, shall diligently inquire and true presentment make, of all such matters and things as shall bo given you in charge ; tho counsel for tho People of tho State, your fellows and your own, you shall keep secret; you shall present no one from envy, hatred, or malice ; nor shall you leave any one unpresentod through fear, favor, affec tion, or hope of reward ; but you shall present ull things truly as they come to your knowledge, according to your un derstanding. So help you God 1" And to tho other members the follow ing oath was administered : " The same oath which your Foreman has taken on his part, you, and each of you, shall well and truly observe and keep on your part. So help you God 1" Some of the jurors thought we had no right, under our oath, to show favor, no matter how strong might bo the appeal to our sympathies. Every man in the room wished to be lenient, but at tho same time, above all other things, wish ed to do his duty. The discussion re sulted in our sending for the District Attorney and asking his advice. After hearing the case, he said there was a difference of opinion as to the power of a Grand Jury. " You can un doubtedly," ho continued, " exercise your discretion in certain cases, and act as you think is for tho best interests of society, it is both right and proper that the Grand Jury, and also the Dis trict Attorney, should be clothed with a discretionary power, as it frequently happens that they can do more good by exercising it than by following the Btrist letter of the luw. I will give you an illustration : Some years ago, the case of a young man charged with em bezzlement was placed in my hands to prosecute. His employer was deter mined to push the case ; he was rather ugly about it, and there seemed no oth er course than to prosecute. The young man was out on bail, and came to me to beg to be let off. He said he was guilty, and should so plead ; that ho had an in valid sister, and with tho utmost econo my on his small salary he was unable to support himself. He knew that this was no excuse tor his thett, but he took the money under great temptation, and did not realizo the enormity of his offence until after he had committed it. " You can send me to tho penitentiary," he said, " and nobody can blame you ; but you will ruin mo for life, and bring dis grace upon my parents and sister, who do not know that I am charged with crime. If I can be released and the matter hushed up. I will faithfull v prom ise to do better in future, and I think this will be a hie-long lesson to me. Ho pleaded so earnestly that I promised to do what I could for him. I sent for his accuser, and urged him to withdraw the charge. . At first he refused, but I laid the case before him in such a light that he at once consented. And I then urged hiin to take the young man back and give him a new trial, and after much talk I succeeded. The complaint was withdrawn ; the young man was restor ed to his position ; in a little time his salary was increased; by-and-by the firm dissolved in consoquonoe of the death of one of its members ; the young man went to another house, proved him self worthy of confidence, and to-day he is a member of that house, and as honor able and upright as any business man in JNew xork. tie has never torgotten, and never will forget, that lesson. If ho had gone to the penitentiary his worst fears would have boen realized. When an offender is young, the offence is a first one, and the offender appears penitent, it is entirely proper for you to exercise leniency by dismissing tho com plaint ; and in the case now before you, gentlemen, you have boen entirely right in your action." As the District Attorney ended his re marks there was a round of applause, in which I am very certain every member of the jury participated. Those who had been most doubtiul ot the propriety of our action were heartily glad that their doubts were not well founded. Tho Power of Chemistry. The last example of the power of chemistry will bo found in tho immense prairies of Li Plata and Australia. Hero wander innumerable flocks of sheep and cattle ; a vigorous vegetation, favored by a warm climate and the hu mid salt emanations from the sea pro vides abundance of nourishment ; ani mals prosper and multiply amazingly. The South American hunters are numer ous also ; and the number of cattle kill ed every month may be counted by hun dreds of thousands, so that tho wonder is that they do not wholly disappear. In former days, this rough sport was carried on for the Bake of tho hides and wool only ; the flesh, bones and sinews were too difficult of transport and pre servation for this rudimentary trade, and lay abandoned on tho spot. Some persons interested themselves to utilize more fully these waifs and strays of tho chase. At first, it was proposed to ex port the bones td England and France. In civilized countries they have acquired a commercial value which covers tho prico of tho freight ; they aro largely used by tho cutlers ; gelatine is extract ed from them ; by burning them, tho substance is obtained which clarifies sugar ; 'o.sphorous is made from them, uui lastly, they furnish tho most valua ble manure for tho agriculturalist. As for the skins, tho country not offer ing tho necessary resources for tho es tablishment of tanyards, they were ex ported in a fresh state. A new agent, phonic acid, preserved them from any alteration during tho voyage. It is the best antiseptic known ; thero is no ani mal fermentation which can resist it, no putrefaction that it does not arrest. After this, there only remained tho fiosh to perish for want of suitable means of preservation. 1 he employment of phon ic acid conld not bo thought of ; excel lent as it is for the purification of sta bles, houses, and hospituls, it docs not answer for articles of food. Though it has been purified so as to obtain color less crystals, it always has an odor of tho coal-tar from which it is extracted, which gives a flavor to the meat. In default of a modern antiseptic, another was tried, less officacious, and as old as civilization common salt ; but no decisive result was obtained : it did not give completo security, and it did not yet appear pos sible economically to preserve tho meat which was left to perish. Tho well-known chemist, Dr. Liebig, directed his researches in another way ; instead of exporting tho flesh, he wish ed to concentrate on the spot, and in a small compass, tho principal nutritive elements ; to obtain an extract of meat, which, when it reached England, might be weakened by thirty times its weight of water, and give a liquid having all tho essential qualities of ordinary beef ,tea. This new commercial production has been largely consumed in England and Germany ; it is used in the navy and in distant colonies where food is dif ficult to obtain ; but in France, where rehnement ot taste is greater, tho sue cess has not been so general. This is tuo manner iu which it is prepared ; tho process is very simple, and suited to the primitive state ot tho country. Af ter the animal is killed, tho meat is cut very small, and steeped in an equal quantity of water ; this is boiled for a quarter of an hour, when tho whole is thrown into a linen cloth, and the liquid which passes through is the beef-ten in its normal state. There is, however, too largo a proportion of water, and somo fat, which would interfere with its keep iug. The dydraulic-press is applied to tho mass of moat which is left after straining ; and thus pressed it forms a sort ot cake, which is considered to bo exhausted of all eatable particles ; a residue which at somo future time will probably be turned to a useful purpose. The liquid is again heated, and the fat being carefully skimmed off the top, it is boiled down to one-sixth of its origin-i al volume, and brought to the consisten cy of extract, keeping it from all con tact with the air iu tho vessel whero a vaccuum has been made by means 'of a pneumatic pump. Nothing more is wanting but to pour it into jars hermet ically closed, and sealed with a leaden seal, to preserve them from adulteration. Chambers' Journal. - Old Chestnut Trees on Mount Etna. Mount Etna is celebrated for the great ago and colossal dimensions of its chest nut trees ; for one of tho largest and oldest trees of the kin, in tho world is that on Mount Etna, which is called Custagno di Cento Cavalli. It is said Jeanne of Arragon, on her road from Spain to Naples, visited Mount Etna. attended by her principal nobility, and being caught in a heavy shower, she and a hundred cavaliers took refuge un der the branches of this tree, which completely sheltered them. A century ago, according to Brydon, this tree measured 204 feet in circumference near tho ground ; but more recent travellers give only 180 feet as its girth. There are also two other celebrated chestnuts on Mount Etna, one called the Castarr- no di Santa Agata, which measures 70 feet in girth, and tho other, Castacno della Nave, which measures 64 fect ; the stems, however, attain no great height, but soon branch off above the ground. According to Dr. Philippi, the Castanea vesca does not appear to be wild in any part of Mount Etna, but always to be cultivated. The Harden.. England has 32,023 breweries. Facts and Figures. Ah Och, of San Francisco, Mongol, while being prepared for tho grave, Chi nese fashion, was burned on the fore head with a white-hot poker, when ho rose to explain. Ho was only in a trance. A writer says that moro thaiv 130.000 acres of the best timber in Atherioa aie cut every year to supply the demand for railway sleepers alone. In a single year tho locomotives in tho United States consumed 160,000,000 worth of wood. The total number of hoes packed in the West for the season just closed was 4,820,555, against 3,695,251 the previous season, boing an increase of 1,125,304. Of the number packed in Illinois, 1,- oiV,on, (Jhicago packers make returns of over 1,206,000. The bullion production of the Pacifio States and Territories for 1869 and 1870 averuges from 170,000,000 to 175,000,000. lhere is reason to behove that last year it reached $80,000,000, and there is good ground for expecting that this year it will aggregate trom 90,000,000. and may possibly reach $ 100,000,000. The land of Dakota is largely prairie. ranging from one-third " bottom" and " bench lands, ono-third gently sloping-, dry, rich and productive higher prairie, to one-third moro rolling and elevated prairie, part of which is second or third class in quality. Tho timber is found along the streams and in places other wise protected .from prairio fires. The Western States ore now delibera ting whether tho disfigurement of a wife's complexion by small-pox ought not to be added to tho list of logul grounds for divorce. Tho question has been brought up by the action of sever al estimable Chicagoans who claim to be justified in deserting their better hall's tor tins reason ; and it is plausibly ar gued that sinco much less obnoxious conduct on a man's part is daily admit ted as good causo tor treeing his wito from nuptial bonds, sho ought not to be allowed to pit herself against him for lite without any chance ot nis escap ing. Tho Chinese carte tie vixilfi is a curiosi ty. It consists of a huge sheet of bright scarlet paper, with the owner's name in scribed in largo letters tho bigger tho more exquisite. For extra grand occa sions this card is folded ten times, the name is written in the right hand lower corner with a humiliating prefix like your very stupid brother, k " vour un worthy friend who bows his head and pays his respects," etc., etc., etc., tho words " your stupid" taking the place of our " yours respectfully." It is eti quette to return theso cards to tho visit or, it being presumablo that their ex pense it too great for general distribu tion. Thero is an embryo showman out in Virginia City, Nevada, who has already made his mark in tho world. Ho is an interesting boy of nine summers, who painted his little brother in the latest stylo of tho fierce Sioux, and exhibited him as a captured son of " Spotted Tail" at 25 cents a ticket. The exhibition was a great success, and tho juvenilo Barnum was drawing in tho quarters at a rapid rate, when his mother came to seo the show and recognized her off spring through tho red ochre and lamp black, whereupon, circumstances over which tho young monager had no con trol, put an end to his great enterprise, for the entertainment of his fellow citi zens. A Western editor, during tho late frozen period, thus accounts for the dearth of local news in his paper : " Our reporter started out this afternoon in search of local items. After an uuusuully long absence he returned ; but, alas ! in a most deplorable condition frozen stiff as a poker and minus ono ear. We stood him up against tho wall behind tho stove, and ordered tho 'devil' to pilo on tho fuel. We finally succeeded in prying his mouth open with tho ash shovel, when a dosen or so ef words fell out upon tho floor and broke into piocos. We set the ' devil ' at work putting the pieces together, and ho finally reported tho following as tho result of his labor : ' Coldest day of tho season ; everything froze stiff ; saloon keepers selling hot whiskies by the stick.' " A Kentucky country paper gives tho following : Recently one of our most ex cellent housewives had occasion to send to Louisville for a cook. The latter in a few days put in her appearance, arrayed, apparently, in a large quantity of cast-off masquerade finery of the Queen of Sheba ; dilapidated paniers, flounces, hoops, and with a stunning head-dress, that would hove fitted the Queen of Hayti jute curls, ringlets, frizzles, chig nons, and rats in alarming profusion. Tho former looked on tho new-comer in astonishment, and whon sufficiently re covered, informed her that she did not think she would suit as mistress for tho kitchen, as her appearance indicated that it would tako three-quarters of tho day to get up her oluborate head toilette alone. " Why, la, ma'am, I neeer combs my head," was the response. Tho fash ionable cook returned to Louisvillo. A writer has taken the trouble to give the actual material used in constructing a pianoforte. In every instrument thero aro fifteen kinds of wood viz., pine, maple, spruce, cherry, walnut, white wood, apple, bass wood and birch, all of which aro indigenous ; and mahogany, ebony, holly; cedar, beech and rosewood, from Honduras, Ceylon, England, South America and Germany. In this combi- . nation elasticity, strength, pliability, toughness, resonance, lightness, durabil ity and beauty aro individual qualities, and the general result is voice. Thero are also used of the metals, iron, steel, brass, white metal, gun metal and lead. There are in the same instrument of sev en and a half octaves, when completed, two hundred and fourteen strings, mak ing a total length of seven hundred and eighty-seven feet of steel wire, and fivo hundred feet of white (covering wire). Such a piano will weigh from lune hun dred to ono thousand pounds, and will last, with constant use (not abuse,) fif teen or twenty years. V